Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 3, 1914, Page 7

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mt. de Fo RITING TABLE aeedle by Id Make an Ac- | puitingthé end of the Bk that exists Is Sultable before it is unwound from the spool Sale. in the eye first. If the silk is put in from the end you break or cut it un- orative little orea- | twists more easily thag if it is thread- piece or the writ- | ed from the other end. n the accompany- may find a place ! thing to have a small pair of scissors e odds and ends, | always handy. You can have ome tsealing wax, etc, | fastened about your belt with a piece up & table unless | of ribbon or tape. Biting thread is assigned to them. | a bad habit because it breaks the the ald of one of | enamel on the teeth, thus making s in which cream | work for the dentist probable. or making it, pro-| Clip all bastings to be removed at d grate it up into | five or sixinch intervals. They can he size of a pin's | then be pulled out without wrinkling the axterior of the | the fabric. on of the handle, | If you are making a skirt or waist ! with plaits or tucks in it, try preu-‘ Don’t bite threads. It is an eu'yl ~.FLA., NOV and Ros—— THAT LITTLE GIRL & E%52T TN and he saw tall, comely, graceful—a young lady! ' Was she flushing indignantly, anni- A e T e hilating him with majestic glance, (Copyright, 9, by W. G. Chapman.) laughing, or crying? He knew not “Still a confirmed bachelor, Ros- which, so dazed was he, and because | just then, Hal arrived, ran at him with By ROBERT DUANE LATIMER. ‘ “Lonely and hopeless as ever, I the eagerness of a school-boy, whirled should say!” replied Roslyn Ware him about in a gay caper and marched with a submissive smile. | him up to his room, drawing out his “Wish you would follow my exam- protestations. ! ple,” declared Hal Vance oxnbennuy.' “That little girl of yours,” Roslyn “Been married ten years, ideal home, lovely wife and say, Roslyn, we've got a little girl at our house who would ! Just charm you. See here, shake oft | Ing them into place before basting the gust of ages and come down and them. Pin them in two or three places and press with a cool iron, re- moving the pins as you come to them. It is then an easy matter to oaste the plaits or tucks exactly in place. Don’t sew on black at night. it 18 very trying on the eyes: White sew- ing is the only sort that ought to be done at night, and that should be done in a clear, shaded light. Never sew in the dusk. Nothing tires or injures the eyes so quickly as doing fine sewing ‘n an insuffi- clent light. SEVERE PUNISHMENT ' Of Mrs. u.”gll’ of Five Years’ ' went into a departmient store and ap- | said Lois prettily. | Standing, Relieved by Cardui. der the cork over it — pf the surface is en- 1l of this town, says: *I suffered for ive years with womanly troubles, also stomach troubles, and my nishment was more than any one could tell. 1 tried most every kind of medicine, but none did me any good. 1 read one day about Cardui, the wo- man’s tonic, and | decided to try it. I not taken but about six bottles until was almost cured. It did me more medicines | had ® than all the other s, treated in the man- e pretty and attrac- | m‘ put together, friends began me why | g e dind m‘l‘:’eg o, well, ‘and Tl vhem about r, and n place of the | D'y, lady reader, suffer from any eferred, they can be ' of the aiiments due to womanly trouble, with enamel of any guch as headache, backache, sideache e of color. (gles lessness, and that everlastingly tired 1 so, let us to Cardul & DMAN WHO SEWS' oA foet oo ident s St A 8 |fust as it-has a million other women in e past half century. faking Cardul to-day. won' regml:‘ All druggists. " Write to: Advisory Dent., Tenn., for et Us Supply our Needs Ebe left until the glue loose portions of the moved with a soft pssary, that is to say, ce of the jug Is ex- ess can be repeated. b covered with gold pdle painted with pale Thread 8ilk Into Small Pair of Scle- ways Handy You silk in* Drange Clippers Spruce Pine Picking Ladders Cement Coated Box Nails s Orange Plows American Field Fence Cyclone Ornamental Fence Everything usually carried in an up-to-date Hardware Store liven up with real heart and home | The result was that Roslyn prom- . Ised to put in a week at Rest Haven | ten days later. On the afternoon of & ninth day he left his office with “the managed to sandwich in as they de- scended the stairs. “Lois, my wife's sister.” We adopted her, you see,” explained Hal and Ros- G 1 =\ A : .Jie-\Vheat, Cake Flour, arem==—rising Fiour. Richelieu Pancake and Buckwheat Flours and Oatmeal. lyn dimly comprehended the fearful mistake he had made. He shivered and shrank as they reached the parlor again and was greeted by his hostess and introduced to Miss Verner. To his agreeable surprise a welcoming My Line is as Fine as any in Town. My Store Clean, San- itary, Free from Rats and Roaches. hand was placed in his own. He looked girl”of his old friend, Hal, in his mind. { “I suppose the graceful thing to do, ' encouragingly. He stammered forth. is to take her some kind of a present,” | “I—I acted under a wrong impres- ! ruminated Roslyn. “Let me see—Hal gion, Miss Verner,” but secretly he has been married about ten years.! congratulated himself as he viewed This little daughter of his, I should | the velvety cheek he had so audacious- , Judge, must be about elght years of ly kissed. . age. Now, what would be an appro-| Here Mr. Vance broke forth with a i priate gift?” | great Jolly guffaw. He slapped Roslyn This up into a bright roguish face smiling ] for Roslyn. He was twenty-eight, but i ing had been all business and to a de- gree he had grown prim and precise. He was shy, so much so that when he | proached the handsome brunette in charge of a toy counter, he hemmed and hawed in a decided fluster. was really a puzzling enigma | on the shoulder and jollied him brisk- ly, for his wife had recited to him | knew little of femininity. His train- the piano incident. “About the doll, too”—blundered on Roslyn. “Oh, I shall keep that, if you please,” “You have given me a grand idea, Mr. Ware.” Then followed a week that was full of soulful delight for Roslyn. Lois The young lady smiled epcourag-!was a revelation to him, kind, consid- { Ingly, for Roslyn was a well groomed, | erate, almost gentle. Closer and closer . stopped to think of jt. He stated the . object of his call in general terms. “Child, girl—about how old, now?” propounded the pretty saleswoman. “Oh, I should think about eight.” “I have the very thing for you,” in- | sisted the vivacious miss. “It's the' latest thing in dolls.” Roslyn bad seen dolls before, but never one like this. Face and dress .}.‘ms “it's the Latest Thing in Dolls.” were radiant and fairy-like. Its eyes opened and closed and its hands moved. “Let me show you,” proceeded the clever young woman, and she wound up some phonograph mechanism skill- fully concealed within the body of the doll. A lisping baby-like voice recited audibly and charmingly, “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.” “And again,” added the saleswoman, and the doll sung, “Cherries Are Ripe.” “Four other records go with the out fit,” continued the young lady. “As you see, the lips move and at a little distance it is quite a phenomenon.” “It is, indeed,” agreed Roslyn. “How much?” “Eighteen dollars and one-half.” “I'll take it,” sald Roslyn promptly. He was very much satisfied with his progress. It was dusk when he ar- rived at the town on the outskirts of which was located the Vance place. He ordered his baggage taken up to the house. He himself would walk. Roslyn carried the box containing the doll with him. Little Lois—he was sure Hal had called the child that—would, girl-like, be eager to see her present as soon as possible. Roslyn reached his destination at twilightt A servant answered his summons at the door bell. He told who he was and she was at once all deferential attention. “Mr. Vance has just gone around to the horses, sir,” she said. “Please step into the parlor. He will be here in A few moments.” Roslyn’s sight was blurred by the dimness of the hali, but he passed through a doorway indicated. He was about to seat himself, when the sound of careless variant notes from a plano in a corner of the next room attracted his attention. He vaguely made out a feminine form one-half re- clining on the broad music seat and , striking this and that careless note | leisurely and in a dreamy fashion. “It's Lois, the little daughter of ' the house,” at once decided the well- Mt. Alrfi N. C.—Mrs. Sarah M. Chap- . handsome man, although he had never ' grew the strength and rare beauty of their congenial acquaintanceship, “I wish you to come with me, if you will, Mr. Ware,” she said brightly one day. “I must show you the good your | gift doll has done. There was a poor fading invalid child to whom it has given great joy and a new grasp of life.” | Roslyn Ware never forgot that sweet presence near him as they gazed cautiously through the open win- dow of a little humble hut, where a sweet child sat up on a couch, an an- | dlence of juveniles about her, while the wonderful doll went through its | clever paces. “Dear Miss Verner,” he said, at the point of tears, as they moved on, “let . me buy dolls for the whole crowd!” | But Lois smiled forbiddingly at his | reckless enthusiasm. She was grave, earnest, womanly the night he left for | the city. Her pulses fluttered as he | said in his awkward but manly way: ““Miss Verner, I will come back here | for my vacation next year, it you say . 80.” | She looked up into his eyes earnest- i ly, as only a woman who is in love "can look. Then her head drooped " shyly as she whispered: | “Oh, please, Mr. Ware, please come l back sooner than that!” MURDER TRIALS IN HOLLAND Dutch Judge Puts All the Interroga- tories to the Witnesses—Do Not Have Juries. A learned and capable jurist has as- serted that the French method of legal | procedure, which, contrary to our own, presumes an indicted person guilty un- til he is proven innocent, comes near- er dispensing actual justice than our own system. But in Holland the courts have, in some respects, a better sys- l tem than that of the French. The ac- | cused in every case has the benefit of the doubt, and circumstantial evi- dence as the only foundation for a plea of conviction is in disfavor. The Dutch do not have juries, and there 8 no battle of wits among coun- sel. All questions, whether by the prosecution or the attorney for the accused, are put to the witness through the judges after he has weighed the justice of the interroga- tion. This feature of their system has some pronounced advantage over our own. It eliminates the practice of confusing the witness or the accused by misleading questions. It renders imposstble the abominable practice in our courts known as the “browbeat- ing” of witnesses, which unfortunately is permitted to an extent that causes the intelligent observer’s blood to boil at times because of its unfairness and cruelty. It makes the solemn business of dispensing justice a common trade instead of a heavenly vocation.—Sioux City Tribune. Hadn't Eaten Breakfast. ‘ ‘The most embarrassing moment of my life,” says my father-in-law, “came to me in Ireland when I was a small boy.” He and his chum would never allow a strange boy to come on their street without picking a fight, and so one morning a lad several inches taller than the you:g warriors apeared and was promptly thrashed. My father-in- law says he did it alone. Feeling rath- er chesty about it he gathered a good- sized crowd by hooting and calling after the retreating foe. When the little fellow was far enough away to feel safe he turned meaning Roslyn, and he advanced around and called back in a trembling | o o : fon. He placed his hand | Voice: “Yes, yez licked me, but I bet : I;';::: Tifi'fi;fim gwll:h.eme words: it 1 could have me breakfast every H Ros- | mornin’ like youse do, youse couldn’t i J&X‘fla?fi“fih‘"fl’n’f&? Lots. 90 it.” ; "I have brought you a doll"—and then | “M mother sent me after him, ! he stooped over and kissed a soft vel- | 58Y8 my fatherin-law, “and he had a vety cheek, and then— |very good breakfast that mo: ARDWARE CO. | seian { l| | FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES DAILY i® Yours to Serve in Groceries, Feed, Seed and Fertilizer. D. B. Dickson FPPPPPEPPEPHPOBDHEEHOBBHISOODBOSIDIDHHICEBEO S Sdd S ddd <« ] ”» Don’t fail to see us before having your Electrical work done. We can save you money.and give you better ‘ stuff’’ than you have been getting, and for a litt'e less money. T. L. CARDWELL, Electrical Contractor EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL PHONE: 233 \West Main, Street andNew York Avenue PBEPESEDEPPITPDILIESEIIP KELLEY'S BARRED Plymouth Rocks BOTH MATINGS Better now than ever before High class breeding birds at reasonable prices. Fggs from high class pens for hatching. Write me before ordering else where. H. L. KELLEY, Griffin. Fla Don’t Talk War, But Talk Business, and Boost Your Town HE HUB is still selling Hart Schaffner & Marx good Clothing, and it is the ' best clothing ever brought to g your city. Now, Old Menr and Young Men, come around and see what you can buy for $15and $18 to $25 Have just received a new shipment of Arrow Shirts, Neckwear and Onyx Hose ! Will appreciate showing : them to everybody .’ JOS. The Hub - This Store is the Homezof Hart Schaffner and Marx Gsod Cl¢

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